Talk:Tose
I ran a compare between a couple of their WonderSwan games (Ganso Jajamaru-kun and Toukon Retsuden) and got some interesting hits. One big chunk of code (I'm assuming a sound driver) turned up in every WS/WSC game we have listed along with the following:
- WS Buffers Evolution, Densha de Go!, Densha de Go! 2, GunPey, Harobots, Robot Works (Wonder Borg), Tarepanda no GunPey, Wonder Stadium '99, WonderSwan Handy Sonar
- WSC Final Fantasy, Kosodate Quiz Dokodemo My Angel
May be a good starting point for further investigation. --Dimitri (talk) 10:11, 28 June 2017 (CEST)
- The GunPey games and Buffers Evolution are commonly credited to Koto. I wonder if Tose did the programming or sound on those? The other Koto titles (Mikeneko Holmes and Flash Koibito-kun) were developed by Mintjulep apparently, so perhaps Koto only did the planning in the games they're credited with.
- FF1 directly names Tose in the credits, but the staff looks like it's all Square people (unless Tose had a team just for Square projects), most of whom also appear on WSC FF2 which claims to be by some company called "Kan Navi". --Dimitri (talk) 11:03, 28 June 2017 (CEST)
Would it pay to do a code comparison of SG-1000 games? Like Exerion against Champion Baseball or something? I feel like Tose probably did some of the early games on the system. CRV (talk) 05:40, 14 April 2017 (CEST)
- I ran Champion Baseball against Exerion and got about 400 bytes of shared code that's also in Champion Tennis and Pop Flamer (and nothing else). Do those hits sound reasonable? --Dimitri (talk) 06:54, 14 April 2017 (CEST)
- Sounds reasonable. I was thinking Congo, Sindbad, Pacar, and N-Sub were theirs, too. CRV (talk) 07:17, 14 April 2017 (CEST)
From the recent Famitsu feature [1], looks like there's finally some updated data: as of November 30, 2016, they've worked on 1032 home console titles, 940 phone/mobile titles (this may include portable titles based on the wording), and 285 arcade titles and "other content".
Other interesting tidbits I saw in the preview images:
- They had only 5 staff when the company was started
- They were able to get an early lead on Famicom development because by coincidence they'd already been using the 6502 in arcade board designs
- CEO Saito started there as an engineer and programmer, while COO Watanabe started as a part-time employee
Looks like it's mostly a feature about their business more than their work, though -- nothing we didn't know about before. --Dimitri (talk) 10:27, 30 March 2017 (CEST)
CRV, which company developed "Maru's Mission"?
- Probably Tose. Does this look like the box to you (above "major customers," between 76 and 20)? CRV 06:11, 19 January 2012 (CST)
- Lol... interesting... well, yes, the position of the colors totally match. So you based on this photo? And the source??? Anyway I asked you because the game was released yesterday for the 3DS Virtual Console. I was never familiarized with the NA box art until 3 or 4 years ago. Ugly box art in my opinion. I bought the Japanese version when I was a kid.. made a shitty video showing the manual/art work: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SUV7th71iso .
- It uses a font that's also used in Pinball Quest. It also came up in a code comparison. CRV 07:24, 19 January 2012 (CST)
- Lol... interesting... well, yes, the position of the colors totally match. So you based on this photo? And the source??? Anyway I asked you because the game was released yesterday for the 3DS Virtual Console. I was never familiarized with the NA box art until 3 or 4 years ago. Ugly box art in my opinion. I bought the Japanese version when I was a kid.. made a shitty video showing the manual/art work: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SUV7th71iso .
CRV, is this a Tose game? http://www.gamefaqs.com/nes/570696-ultraman-club-kaijuu-dai-kessen/images
- I think it's a G-Artists game, but I wouldn't chisel that in stone. CRV 09:10, 11 June 2012 (CDT)
Soccer Tsuku 2002: J.League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou!
Tose made this one? CRV, where's the source for this? Thanks a lot.
- Probably Developer Table. CRV 05:53, 19 July 2012 (CDT)